Buurtzorg type organisations &
Agile Commissioning
Dennis [email protected]
079 80 54 1990
© Basis Ltd
Buurtzorg - new approach to district nursing and home care services.
“The RCN has long supported this model, which was founded in the Netherlands and has garnered international acclaim for its nurse-led, cost-effective principles, which rely upon nurse-innovation leading the way for care of patients in their own communities.”[5]
Started in 2007 with 1 team/4 nursesDelivering community care
Jos
Different services ?In one neighbourhood
1. holistic assessment of the client’s needs which includes medical, long-term conditions and personal/social care needs. Care plans are drafted from this assessment
2. map networks of informal care and assess ways to involve these carers in the client’s treatment plan
3. identify any other formal carers and help to co-ordinate care between providers
4. care delivery
5. support the client in his/her social environment
6. promote self-care and independence.
Over 15,000 people employed, serving over 100,000 users, working in small self managing teams
• 45 people in one back office; 15 coaches and NO managers:
• Coaches form the span of control support
• Expert, when needed, can be hired as a freelancer
• Head office provides courses on how to manage without a boss
Different organisation design?
It has been proven to work.
• Overhead costs: 8% (average 25%) more money for the care and innovation
• Profit rate: 4% • Sickness rate: 4% (average 6%) • “Quality- Compared to 307 other
organizations for community care they give the highest score to Buurtzorg. (NIVEL 2009)“
• Highest client satisfaction: 9.1
Significant reductions in the cost of care provision:
• decrease in unplanned care and hospital admissions
• 40 per cent reduction in client costs when compared to other homecare organisations.
• a 50 per cent reduction in hours of care due to health promotion initiatives and patient independence.
Four characteristics of Buurtzorg –and other ‘Teal’ teams
TEAM SELF MANAGEMENTPeople close to the need, make local decisions as part of self-managing teams. A team is small (max 12 people) and knows the local area well. There is little or no middle management as teams work and are evaluation on key outcomes.
ADAPTIVE SYSTEMThe wider system from leadership to commissioning requires a more adaptive approach. Teal teams operate within an organisational system that develops towards agility itself.
AGILE DEVELOPMENTAgile practices to develop through an iterative
process are used to grow the organisation. Teams gain fast feedback and through prototyping, learn
and grow the improvements, and scale the change.
WHOLENESSInstead of a focus on ‘narrow’ professional function, people work more holistically to
support a client. The emphasis is on roles and practice instead of on processes. Teams
consist of generalists and as needed, pull in specialists around needs of clients.
© Basis Ltd 2019
Adapted from F. Laloux three Teal breakthroughs
The problem in getting it off the ground
In the Top 3
Commissioning
Agile & Commissioning
Commissioning for solving a problem..
Measurement & Control
Problems
Growing up this was my phone.. Then after 22 years (hurrah !) an upgrade ..…new feature ..guess which one…..
Agile & Commissioning
Compare: Now your mobile phone changes (software) every single day !
…you could now order the phone in 3 different colours
Unstable radioactive atoms decay exponentially. Their rate of decay is described by reference to a 'half-life', which is a measure of the period of time it takes for the substance undergoing decay to decrease by half”
In 1980 -> 10-12 years,2000 -> 2-3 years, 2012 -> 6 months
“If a contract pre-defines the specifications of products/services, half of those specifications will become obsolete by the end of month 6, half of the remaining half (i.e. 1/4) will become obsolete by the end of month 12, half of the remaining quarter (i.e. 1/8) will become obsolete by the end of month 18, and so on. Hence, by the end of month 18, according to the University of Missouri studies, only 1/8 (or 12.5%) of the contractual specifications for the products/services will still possess any inherent value”
Compare radioactive atoms*….
* For the nerds among us..
‘You don’t really understand a system until you to start to change it’
– Kurt Lewin
‘A lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them’
– Steve Jobs
Sprints>>>>
From discovery to prototyping
Point of real changeWhen the new approach becomes the new norm
Clear need
Observe & empathise
Hypothesis
Prioritise
Increase change depth and width
Adoption
Coaching
- - - - - - - - - - -Prototype - - - - - - - - - - -
© Basis Ltd
Define outcomes
Design
Time based payments (Story) pointsbased payments
Outcomebased payments
e.g. 2 week duration
Comparison between traditional and Agile contract models
Traditional contract model
• Output-based requirements
• Sequential development
• Change control mechanism
Agile contract model
• Outcome-based requirements
• Iterative development
• Each cycle delivers value,
prioritised each
In the Top 3
Commissioning
Agile & Commissioning
Commissioning for solving a problem..
Measurement & Control
Problems
Commissioning for solving a problem..
We commission for known solutions not to solve ‘wicked’ problems.
CURRENT SITUATION
PUBLIC SECTOR
• Procurement is mostly forproblems that have a knownsolution.
• Bigger companies have resourcesand experience to tender for work –SME’s and especially startups miss out. There is a lack of innovation.
• Co-design with providers is theaspiration but is limited due toprocurement rules.
STARTUPS
BUT NOW
• More need and recognition thatdealing with“wicked” problemsneeds a differentapproach; Co-creation and iterative
• Clear promotion ofstart-ups by publicsector organisations
• A more entrepreneurial & innovationfocus neededwithingovernmentorganisations.
Holland has started the most STiRs, many supported by World Startup Factory
In the Top 3
Commissioning
Agile & Commissioning
Commissioning for solving a problem..
Measurement & Control
Problems
If Agile is the approach, Scrum is how to do it
• Scrum is a method to deliver which are time-boxed, focus period of work
• The benefit of sprints are that you can quickly test and get feedback to see if what you are developing is on the right track
• Ideally, each sprint is 2 weeks long although you can do 1 week, no more than 4
• The method is ‘light’ as is the paperwork and reporting (it’s not paperless!)
• Think of them as small, quick, focused projects that deliver a piece of a larger picture
Create /maintain
thebacklog
Sprint planning
The daily ‘stand ups’
Sprint review
Retrospective
Reporting
CompleteIf Agile is the approach, Scrum is how to do it
The ‘for services’ version
Stakeholders input in to the backlog ‘these are the things we would like developed’
The Product Owner ‘holds’ all these ‘things’ and prioritises based on knowledge of importance
The team work with the product owner to understand the vision for the chosen priority and the MVP for sprint
The team then break the MVP in to tasks
The team delivers the sprint
The Product Owner reviews the MVP at the end of the sprint to give feedback
The team reflects
The team has daily stand ups
2 weeks
Value
Not waterfall
AGILE PROCESS & YOUR WORK
30min
Recognising the problem…world we live in
NO
EXERCISE
30min
Outcome
Product Owner
Scope & team (incl Agile lead)
Next – within 2-3 week:
Backlog:
Questions:
IMPLICATIONS FOR COMMISSIONING
30 min
Backlog and Prioritisation
UPDATE <NON NEGOTIABLE>
Started, Grow, Manage Contract
- How codesign with suppliers -
Framework contract
Result specification cycle
Result specification cycle
Result specification cycle
Result specification cycle
Outcome defined
There is an overall framework in place and specified in contact , with payment for some core service (less than half). The result specification cycles are not initially specified in the contract. They are specified as experience and need dictates. Cycles can be terminated when needs are fulfilled or when the supplier does not perform successfully.
Payment, in part or whole, is based on delivery of specified customer results, not on delivery of technology or service itself. This can be the overriding outcome (e.g. less re-admittance in hospital) or per each result specification cycle/timeframe
The flexible results contracting idea is simple – the relationship between the customer and the supplier can exist only for as long as the defined results keep on coming through the pipeline. If results are not happening, the customer is free to stop further activity. You are no longer bound by contract to a supplier who produces bad or costly work. And they know that, so they will be more motivated, at all times, to keep the customer happy.
Outcome based contracts with result specification cycles
Or even more flexible contracts with only result specification cycles
Sprints>>>>
From discovery to prototyping
Point of real changeWhen the new approach becomes the new norm
Clear need
Observe & empathise
Hypothesis
Prioritise
Increase change depth and width
Adoption
Coaching
- - - - - - - - - - -Prototype - - - - - - - - - - -
© Basis Ltd
Define outcomes
Design
Time based payments (Story) pointsbased payments
Outcomebased payments
e.g. 2 week duration
SNOWFLAKES
AGILE TEAMS ARE MORE
SELF-MANAGING
Frequent
feedback
Individual purpose
Ability
Outputs agreed
Freedom to act
Clearoutcomes
Few & simple rules
Single focus
Cope withambiguity
Individual purpose – the raison d’être, which gets people motivated, and
also unites them
Ability– people have both the skill to do their job and they are keen to get
better at this
Tolerance to ambiguity – things look a bit chaotic and there is a degree
of tolerance to such uncertainty
Single focus – avoid multi-tasking as much as possible. Focus on one thing
at one time.
Frequent feedback – there are clear measures which enable people to see
how they and their team are doing at any point in time
Clear individual or team outputs (‘products’) – each person knows what
he/she is trying to achieve and why this has been prioritised. The team did
the estimation and agreed on what is feasible within the timeframe
Few & clear rules – there are a few clear rules which lay down how people
operate and the key principles they must follow
Freedom to act – individuals have full discretion how they go about doing
jobs/achieving objectives
Clear outcomes (not outputs!) – It is clear what the ultimate outcomes
should be from the team work. How does this relate to the overall
organisational purpose.
Individual
Team © Basis Ltd
Self-management
IN PRACTICE
• Process complicated• Service fragmented• IT not integrated• Teams demoralised• No holistic view of problems, • difficult to intervene early and prevent
Seven separate teams responsible for investigating all forms of ‘anti-social behaviour’ including ‘fly tipping’, abandoned vehicles, noise nuisance, street drinking etc.
Whole Service Agile Prototyping
• Real user engagement
• Prototype team with people from five different teams started on day 3
• Directly gaining anti-social behaviour calls – filtered for a few post-codes
• First call – turns out that all five teams had knowledge of background
• Other partners involved – including police (confession)
• Prototype grown to cover all postcodes. Prototype became the ‘business as usual team’
• More prevention, higher motivated team, £0.5 million savings
THE IDEA OF
BUURTZORGDOUBLE DUTCH (ORGANISATIONAL) DESIGN?
Buurtzorg - new approach to district nursing and home care services.
“The RCN has long supported this model, which was founded in the Netherlands and has garnered international acclaim for its nurse-led, cost-effective principles, which rely upon nurse-innovation leading the way for care of patients in their own communities.”[5]
Started in 2007 with 1 team/4 nursesDelivering community care
Jos
Different services ?In one neighbourhood
1. holistic assessment of the client’s needs which includes medical, long-term conditions and personal/social care needs. Care plans are drafted from this assessment
2. map networks of informal care and assess ways to involve these carers in the client’s treatment plan
3. identify any other formal carers and help to co-ordinate care between providers
4. care delivery
5. support the client in his/her social environment
6. promote self-care and independence.
Over 15,000 people employed, serving over 100,000 users, working in small self managing teams
• 45 people in one back office; 15 coaches and NO managers:
• Coaches form the span of control support
• Expert, when needed, can be hired as a freelancer
• Head office provides courses on how to manage without a boss
Different organisation design?
It has been proven to work.
• Overhead costs: 8% (average 25%) more money for the care and innovation
• Profit rate: 4% • Sickness rate: 4% (average 6%) • “Quality- Compared to 307 other
organizations for community care they give the highest score to Buurtzorg. (NIVEL 2009)“
• Highest client satisfaction: 9.1
Significant reductions in the cost of care provision:
• decrease in unplanned care and hospital admissions
• 40 per cent reduction in client costs when compared to other homecare organisations.
• a 50 per cent reduction in hours of care due to health promotion initiatives and patient independence.
Now in Sweden, Japan , France, United States,Scotland, Wales and England
Does it work outside The Netherlands?
https://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/2017/may/09/buurtzorg-dutch-model-neighbourhood-care
In the UK, some are initiated by the NHS others through local authorities e.g. Cambridgeshire
• Self managing team 10-20 people, with different skills
• Work the network, they understand and have strong connections with the local network of support. They build a ‘social map’ of people and organisations that can potentially help. They gain referrals from locality (schools, GPs etc) but also increasingly act as the single access point for referrals
• See the family as a system. One family = one plan. They go beyond standard support; help organise family finances, structure routines, etc.
• One key worker – a trusted person taking care of most work and co-ordinating other support
• Small team in a small areas means small lines of communication. Still much emphasis is put on communication and sharing of information., from visual team space, to team meetings and using advanced technology. Non value adding meetings e.g. within wider care/health systems are avoided.
• As they have their own budget they can decide, and many do, to hire in more early help such as youth workers. They decide on basis of the need in the locality.
The children’s part: “BuurtzorgYoung”
• Focus on client first - roles and practice instead of processes
• Multi-disciplinary teams, with multi-skilled people: 70% is a registered nurse (average 10% in Netherlands)
• Self-management
Some elements of the success Reaction to a mechanistic view of
the organisation
Startup in Residence
• It is a simple idea. A council picks some wicked problems. Start-ups pitch their ideas for solutions to the problems. The selected start-ups become part of an accelerator (working space, training, mentoring, access to people in council, etc) to develop their idea.
The council is the test bed. If the idea works, more councils can buy it....and the partner council has resolved a serious issue. It also avoids a complex process of procurement to resolve an idea for which there is no spec yet.
See:
• https://startupinresidence.org/ (San Franscisco)
• https://startupinresidence.com/ (The Netherlands)
Cone of uncertainty
Steve McConnell 'Software Estimation: Demystifying the Black Art'